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Irish America magazine - Oct/Nov '07 issue: The Billionaire who wasn't, Stephen Rea, Clan Harrington, Home Is Where The Music Is!, Tommy Makem, The First Family of Irish America, Stars of the South

 
Stephen Rea
He returns to the Abbey stage in a play written for him by Sam Shepard - premiere next June.
 
Irish America's First Family
Before the Kennedys of Boston, there were the Carrolls of Maryland.
 
Clan Harrington
The Barony of Kinalmeaky has one of the highest concentrations of the name.
 
 
Obituaries

Tom Manton 1932-2006

Alone among the New York boroughs, Congressman Thomas Manton kept the Queens machine together, which ensured that every office holder, from president on down, had to come and visit the boss in his Queens lair. Manton made sure his own people were looked after and that New York was kept high on the priority list of national candidates.

He was also a very proud Irishman who traced his family roots back to County Galway and visited there. Whenever Irish issues surfaced over the years, Manton was there in Congress, especially on Northern Ireland; he was a fearless advocate for Irish unity.

A few years back on St. Patrick’s Day Tom and I were in the White House. The IRA ceasefire had taken place the previous August and Sinn Féin President Gerry Adams was there to meet with President Clinton. For the first time in a generation it looked like there was hope for peace.

We flew back to New York together and Tom was waxing lyrical about what a special and historic day it had been.

“You know, I have spent a lifetime in politics,” he said, “and today was one of my greatest days. That we could do something like this for the country where my people came from was one of my proudest moments.”

Tom Manton had a lot of proud moments in his life, and his accomplishments will long outlast him. He was the very best kind of Irish-American politician, and we will sorely miss him. – Niall O’Dowd

Photo: Congressman Manton and Bill Clinton in 1991.

Barnard Hughes 1915 - 2006

Irish America lost one of its finest actors on July 11, when Barnard Hughes died in New York City, just six days before his 91st birthday. The Tony and Emmy-award-winning actor featured in a host of movies, including Midnight Cowboy, The Lost Boys and The Cradle Will Rock, and more than 400 Broadway shows. He is best remembered for his starring role in Da, the first

Irish play to win a Tony Award. The play, by Hugh Leonard, which opened on Broadway in 1978, tells the story of a New York playwright who goes back to Ireland to bury his father and is visited by his ghost. The New York Times described Hughes’ portrayal of the father as “masterly in the role of a lifetime, working with every jewel in place.”

Born in Bedford Hills, New York to Irish immigrant parents, Hughes fell into acting by accident. A friend tricked him into auditioning for a repertory company that performed Shakespeare in high schools. After receiving a small role in Taming of the Shrew, Hughes quit Manhattan College to act full time. He made his Broadway debut in 1935 in Herself Mrs. Patrick Crowley.

After serving in the U.S. Army in World War II, Hughes returned to acting but would wait 43 years for his career-defining role in Da. He also received a Best Featured Actor Tony nomination for his 1973 performance as Dogberry in Much Ado About Nothing. Hughes’ last Broadway appearance was in 1999 when he appeared in Noel Coward’s Waiting in the Wings.

Hughes is survived by his wife, Helen Stenborg, his son, Doug Hughes, an acclaimed director who won a Tony Award for his direction of John Patrick Shanley’s Doubt, a daughter Laura Hughes, and a grandson Samuel Hughes Rubin.

– Bridget English

Captain John F. McKenna

The funeral of Captain John F. McKenna took place on August 25 at the Immaculate Heart of Mary Church in Brooklyn. McKenna was born in Windsor Terrace, Brooklyn and went to Bishop Ford Catholic High School. In 1998, he joined the Marine Corps, continuing a family tradition that included his grandfather and uncle, who died in WWII. He was killed in Fallujah, Iraq on August 15 alongside fellow Irish-American Lance Corporal Michael D. Glover, 28, bringing the total number of combat deaths in the U.S. armed forces in Iraq to 2,138. Lance Corporal Glover, from Rockaway, New York, was a nephew of FDNY Chief Pete Hayden’s wife Rita.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
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